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CANADIAN FORCES COLLEGE / COLLÈGE DES FORCES CANADIENNES CSC 31 / CCEM 31 MASTER OF DEFENCE STUDIES COORDINATION AND COMMAND RELATIONSHIPS BETWEEN AXIS POWERS IN THE NAVAL WAR IN THE MEDITERRANEAN 1940-1943 By /par KKpt/LCdr/Capc Andreas Krug This paper was written by a student attending La présente étude a été rédigée par un stagiaire the Canadian Forces College in fulfilment of one du Collège des Forces canadiennes pour of the requirements of the Course of Studies. satisfaire à l'une des exigences du cours. The paper is a scholastic document, and thus L'étude est un document qui se rapporte au contains facts and opinions which the author cours et contient donc des faits et des opinions alone considered appropriate and correct for que seul l'auteur considère appropriés et the subject. It does not necessarily reflect the convenables au sujet. Elle ne reflète pas policy or the opinion of any agency, including nécessairement la politique ou l'opinion d'un the Government of Canada and the Canadian organisme quelconque, y compris le Department of National Defence. This paper gouvernement du Canada et le ministère de la may not be released, quoted or copied except Défense nationale du Canada. Il est défendu de with the express permission of the Canadian diffuser, de citer ou de reproduire cette étude Department of National Defence. sans la permission expresse du ministère de la Défense national Table of Contents I TABLE OF CONTENTS TABLE OF CONTENTS 1 Abstract 1 I. Introduction 2 II. Strategic situation in the Mediterranean before the Outbreak of the Second World War 8 III. The Axis Naval War in the Mediterranean – a Combined War? 11 A. The Relationship between Italy and Germany before the Outbreak of the Second World War 11 1. Italian-German Relationship at the political level 11 2. Military relationships between Italy and Germany 14 B. A Combined War? 20 1. The Italian “Non-belligeranza” 20 2. Before the arrival of the X. Fliegerkorps in December 1940 26 3. Until the German occupation of Greece and Crete, May 1941 32 4. The struggle to supply North Africa, summer and autumn 1941 37 5. On the offensive, winter 1941-autumn 1942 39 6. On the defensive, November1942- 8 September 1943 42 IV. The Axis Naval War in the Mediterranean – a Joint War? 47 A. Relationship between the Regia Marina and the Regia Aeronautica 47 B. Relationship between the Kriegsmarine and the Luftwaffe 50 C. Influence on the conduct of operations 56 1. The arrival of the X. Fliegerkorps in December 1940 59 2. The invasion of Greece and Crete, April/May 1942 63 3. The arrival of the II. Fliegerkorps in December 1941 65 V. Command and Control 67 A. Structure 67 1. Command structure of the Italian Armed Forces 67 2. Command structure of the German Wehrmacht 71 B. Impact on the conduct of operations 75 Table of Contents II VI. Conclusion 83 Bibliography 88 Abstract 1 Abstract The Axis powers ultimately failed to achieve their objectives in the naval war in the Mediterranean, although Italy’s strategic location in the Central Mediterranean provided an excellent basis for successful conduct of the war. Cooperation and coordination between Italy and Germany from the pre-war era to the Italian capitulation on 8 September 1943 were too inefficient to fight a successful modern coalition war. The deficiencies in the combined and joint conduct of the war as well as the command and control relationships were the leading causes behind the Axis defeat in the Mediterranean. This essay argues that inter-service rivalries and the different strategies of the two Axis Powers undermined effective coordination and command relationships between the Axis powers in the Mediterranean theatre. As a result, they fought in a parallel manner rather than in a coordinated effort. The effects of their inefficient coordination and command relationships were that the Axis powers failed in their efforts to deny the Allies the use of the Mediterranean and to protect their own sea lines of communications to North Africa. Ultimately, they even failed to protect the Italian coast against the Allied amphibious landings in Sicily and on the Italian mainland. Introduction 2 I. Introduction Coalition war is not a recent invention nor does it represent an exception in history. Nearly all past large-scale wars were fought in coalitions and fighting in a coalition today is regarded as the standard, even in minor conflicts. Certainly the two World Wars in the last century are examples of grand coalition wars from which valuable lessons for future coalitions can still be drawn. To be victorious in a coalition is much more difficult than to fight a war alone because several conditions must be met to hold the coalition together. It is especially important that each member is equally represented, even if the contribution to the war effort varies from one member to another. The coalition must reflect the needs and strategic goals of its members and must also respect cultural and linguistic differences. These sine qua non have to be reflected in the pre-war era, in the planning for the war, and in the actual conduct of the war. In particular, command and control of a coalition is a special challenge because each member and its interests have to be respected and included in the planning as well as the direction of operations, no matter how small the actual contribution might be.1 These challenges render it very difficult for a coalition to achieve the military principle of unity of command. But without respecting these conditions the member’s support for a coalition will not exist and the cohesion of the coalition is at risk. These challenges further increase when the war requires a joint effort of army, navy, and air force because the command structure must reflect inter- service differences and must be able to mediate them. In the Second World War, the 1 R.L. DiNardo and Daniel J. Hughes, “Germany and Coalition Warfare in the World Wars: A Comparative Study”, War in History 8, no. 2 (Spring 2001): 166; http://content.epnet.com/pdf13_15/pdf/ 2001/31d/01apr01; Internet, accessed 7 January 2005. Introduction 3 Allied Powers provided an example of a successful coalition while the Axis provided an excellent example of a failed one. Since it is easier to deduce lessons from failure than from success, this paper analyzes the joint and combined aspects of the Axis conduct of naval war in the Mediterranean from the Italian declaration of war on 11 June 1940 to the Italian capitulation on 8 September 1943, as well as the history, which led to the flaws in coalition warfare in the Mediterranean theatre. While most literature about the naval war in the Mediterranean during the Second World War concentrates on the examination of the battles and war actions of the different navies fighting in this theatre of war, little attention has been given to the coalition aspects, such as command relationships, cooperation between the Axis navies, and jointness. The first to address the problem was the German Vice-Admiral Eberhard Weichold in his contributions to the Allied essay-writing-project of senior German officers and officials. These essays have to be regarded under the circumstances of the time, as they were written just after the Second World War by German officers and officials, who where heavily involved in German conduct of the war. Therefore, they tend to defend their own decisions during the war and to attribute all errors to Adolf Hitler and National Socialism or to flaws inherent in the system. Furthermore, they are only based on the surviving German records in Allied possession and personal memory. Even with these caveats, these essays provide a valuable insight into the German view of problems during the war, in particular Eberhard Weichold’s essays “Axis Naval Policy and Operations in the Mediterranean, 1939 to May 1943”, “Why Germany lost the Second World War”, and “A Survey from the Naval Point of View of the Organization of the German Air Force for Introduction 4 Operations over the Sea, 1939-1945”.2 Weichold expressed his opinion that the failure of both Italy and Germany to prepare and conduct the war in a coalition was one of the main reasons for the defeat of the Axis. Later on, he expanded his essays into a book which due to his death was never published. After his death, the historian Walter Baum used the work of Eberhard Weichold, expanded by his own studies on the naval war in the Mediterranean and using current historical research, to publish the book “Der Krieg der Achsenmächte im Mittelmeer-Raum. Die Strategie der Diktatoren.” While some parts of this book still contain word for word passages from the essays of Admiral Weichold, other parts were totally rewritten by Walter Baum, which makes an exact attribution of many ideas quite difficult.3 More recently, the naval historian Gerhard Schreiber analyzed the problem of the Italian-German relationship in the Second World War and the inter-war era using intensively German and Italian sources.
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